4.25 Stars — Something different, something good!
I took my time with my cogitation on this one. But in the end, despite some challenges around its conclusion I had to go with my gut & how the made me feel whikst in its clutches!
This was a truly funny, entertaining, heartwarming, heartbreaking ride through the great prose that slings with four superbly mapped/out characters to mesh together into a captivating thriller! This one is told from four different character viewpoints, this juicy Irish thriller centres around a tiger-kidnapping-robbery whereby a male couple are unexpectedly attacked in their home one morning whisky eating breakfast. Vincent, a Bank Manager — is then force to rob us own bank, four branches for $2M each, whisk this partner is held at gun-point.
This is a stylistic choice they may split many readers, with each unique and bold character perspective being told in the first-person. Lyons writes with a subtly that’s rather intoxicating, with each of the four characters well and truly hiding their own and all seemingly capable of being a lead I. Their own right such is the wonderful contrast, pacing changes and overall completely different viewpoints that are all riddled together and apart at once, inc backstory that al ties together beautifully to weave a detailed, deep web of a narrative that holds you right until the very end.
Enjoying this on audible, with perhaps Teo of the best narrators around in Aiden Kelly and my current favourite Brendan McDonald — I hate a joy of a time being entrenched in these characters minds, each offering something fresh and exciting, with background characterisation facets that rival any in the genre.
A controversial ending that took me some time or get behind, this one is a romp of a read that feels like a guilty pleasure but really shouldn’t be, such is the skill of the writer. Both the victim and robber perspectives are evenly matched, as well as behaving a myriad of contrasting personalities that ultimately make this a novel worthy of more attention.
I’m seeing so many high ratings lately, largely due to me being far more selective in what I read and reviewing novels I finish (I no longer persist with novels I’m not enjoying unless I see a reason or a chance a recovery), therefore the higher ratings — but it does seem like the crime-fiction novel really has gone to a whole new level this past 24
Months or so — And I’m glad I can benefit from being she to read what excites me thanks to GR, Bookstagram, etc that’s for sure.
Reading this amidst some heavier Literary Fiction, I must admit it was hard to return to Steinbeck’s Tortilla Flat, such was the level of fun I had here.